Shere FASTticket

Last updated

Worldline FASTticket
ShereFASTticket-Example.png
System information
Full nameWorldline FASTticket
Machine typeSelf-service machine
Type of ticket stockHopper-fed
Manufacturer Shere Ltd, Guildford, Surrey Later Worldline SA
History
First introduced1996
Machine number range4000-4700
Window number rangeUpwards from 81
Machines in use559
Locations/areas/train operating companies

The Worldline FASTticket(also known as QUICKticket) [1] system is a passenger-operated, self-service railway ticket issuing system, developed by the Guildford-based company Shere Ltd and first introduced on a trial basis in Britain in 1996, shortly after privatisation. It has been developed and upgraded consistently since then, and is now used by seven Train Operating Companies (TOCs) as their primary self-service ticket issuing system. Other TOCs have FASTticket machines at some of their stations, sometimes supplementing other systems.

Contents

History and origins

In the last years of British Rail, before privatisation, the main passenger-operated ticket issuing system (POTIS) on the network was the "Quickfare" B8050, developed in the late 1980s by Swiss company Ascom Autelca. These machines were geared towards high-volume, low-value transactions: they only accepted cash, offered a small and mostly unchanging range of destinations, and were a minor evolution from similar earlier machines whose computer technology was based in the early 1980s. Quickfares were widespread, especially in the erstwhile Network SouthEast area, but their limitations were increasing as technology became more sophisticated.

Shere Ltd, founded in its present form in 1992, initially specialised in self-service ticket sales/collection and check-in systems for airlines (notably the former British Midland and KLM UK). In the first instance, the FASTticket system was developed directly from these, with early FASTticket terminals resembling their airport equivalents in many respects. Only a small range of tickets were available, for example - mostly higher-value tickets to important destinations such as London; only debit and credit cards were accepted; touch-screen functionality was offered, but there were limited options and sub-menus; and some of the early machines only printed ATB-style tickets (Automated Ticket and Boarding Pass - an international standard format used by airlines, coaches, railways, ferries and other transport undertakings), which are large and inconvenient for passengers to carry, in comparison with standard credit-card-sized tickets.

As more TOCs showed an interest in the system, the hardware and software were developed further, and machines were universally provided with printers able to vend credit-card-sized tickets (although receipts, card sales vouchers and seat reservations were sometimes still printed by a separate printer within the same machine, on glossy flexible paper cut from a roll - batch reference RSP 3598/3: Example [ permanent dead link ]).

Travel ticket printed in the "original" format - note the different font. Shere FAST (Original).JPG
Travel ticket printed in the "original" format - note the different font.

Before the now standard "Common Stock" layout and format was devised in 2003, credit-card-sized travel tickets were printed on either RSP 3598 or RSP 7599/SCT orange-banded, round-cornered, hopper-fed ticket stock with pre-printed headings. From September 2003, machines began to be converted to the Common Stock format, (printed by the Newbury Data ND4020 ticket printer) with the standard RSP 9599 stock (with no pre-printed headings) being used. The first machine to be converted in this way was at Didcot Parkway. Newly installed machines used the Common Stock format as from 2004, and almost all machines have now been converted to do so (as of 2006).

Trial machines

Various TOCs installed machines on trial, including the following (TOC names shown in the table are those current at the time of installation):

Train operating companyLocationMachine No(s)DateOutcome of trial
Connex South Eastern Dartford
Sevenoaks
Bromley South
London Bridge
Gillingham
Chatham
4236, 4237
4238, 4239
4240
4241-4243
4257
4309
2003
2002
2002
2002
2004
2004
All machines have been replaced by Scheidt & Bachmann Ticket XPress
Connex South Central /
Southern
Gipsy Hill

East Croydon
Haywards Heath
4018
4163
4315, 4376, 4377
4378
1999
2003
2004
2004
4163 replaced 4018 at Gipsy Hill. The other five machines have been replaced like-for-like with new FASTticket machines

Installations

The following table shows the locations and dates of installations as of September 2021.The Number of machines is outdated.

Train operating companyExtant machinesTrial machinesFirst installedNotes
Worldline FASTticket used as the main type of self-service machine
London Overground 9
Worldline FASTticket used in addition to the main type of self-service machine
TransPennine Express 272005Worldline Evoke is the main system used [2]
Great Western Railway 5010Worldline FASTticket is used at former Great Western Trains (ex-Intercity) stations; Scheidt & Bachmann Ticket XPress is used at former Thames Trains and Wessex Trains stations
Worldline FASTticket trialled but no longer used
Connex South Eastern 102002Machines were at Dartford (2), Sevenoaks (2), London Bridge (3), Bromley South (1), Gillingham (1), Chatham (1)
South West Trains 62003Machines were at Walton-on-Thames (1), Wokingham (1), Farnborough Main (1), Havant (3)
Worldline FASTticket is no longer used
Avanti West Coast 811999Replaced by Sigma Machines [3]
Virgin Trains East Coast 713Replaced by flowbird [4]
Chiltern Railways 43(2)2005Replaced by flowbird [5]
East Midland Trains 13Replaced by Scheidt & Bachmann Ticket XPress
Greater Anglia 3015Replaced by Scheidt & Bachmann Ticket XPress
c2c 13Replaced by Sigma Machines
Gatwick Express 3Replaced by Worldline Evoke [6]
Southern 17962004Replaced by Scheidt & Bachmann Ticket XPress [7]
Govia Thameslink Railway Exluding Southern 19Replaced by Scheidt & Bachmann Ticket XPress [7]
Govia Thameslink Railway Exluding Southern 212004Replaced by Scheidt & Bachmann Ticket XPress [7]

Silverlink: In the autumn of 2007, Shere Fasticket machines were installed at stations on the Barking & Gospel Oak line. These offer a typical National Rail ticket selection, with no hint that Oyster card PAYG would be valid on the line from 11 November 2007 when London Overground take it over. At the time of writing (October 2007) the home screen suggests that prepaid (i.e. TOD) tickets can be printed on these machines, though the on screen buttons to do so aren't presented. The machines are able to take cash, but are (at the time of writing) payment card only, pending cash collection (i.e. emptying) arrangements being put in place. Oyster card validators have been installed at B&GO (including on platforms) ready for 11 November, and the ticket machines have a circular blanking plate, perhaps for an Oyster reader/writer.

Features

The machine on the Up platform at Hassocks, installed by Southern on 16 June 2005. Machine number is 4421. Shere FASTticket (Hassocks).jpg
The machine on the Up platform at Hassocks, installed by Southern on 16 June 2005. Machine number is 4421.
One of the pair of test tickets produced by a machine at Huddersfield ShereFASTticket-Test.png
One of the pair of test tickets produced by a machine at Huddersfield

Online screen interface demonstration for Southern Railway customers *

  1. You Cans see the logo of QUICKticket in the Photo of The machine on the Up platform at Hassocks, installed by Southern on 16 June 2005. Machine number is 4421.(Photo listed in article)
  2. says, Gordon STEARS (29 June 2023). "TransPennine Express installs 47 ticket vending machines of a new type". RailAdvent. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
  3. "Alex Saxton on LinkedIn: #railway #transport #retailing #tvm #avantiwestcoast #trenitalia…". www.linkedin.com. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
  4. "New VTEC ticket machines at Kings Cross". RailUK Forums. 3 April 2017. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
  5. "New ticket machines part of Chiltern's long-term plan for change | Chiltern Railways". www.chilternrailways.co.uk. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
  6. "New Self-Service Kiosk For the Gatwick Rail Station | Evoke". www.evoke-creative.com. 8 July 2021. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
  7. 1 2 3 "Redirect Notice". www.google.com. Retrieved 23 October 2023.

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